An employee’s personnel record may be considered  in determining an appropriate penalty, which record could include  “counseling memoranda.”Dundee Central School District v Douglas Coleman, Supreme Court Yates County, Index 2011-0011, Judge W. Patrick Falvey
In an earlier action involving the same  parties in which Dundee challenged the hearing officers determination,  Judge Falvey directed the Hearing Officer to reconsider certain  disciplinary charges and specifications filed against Douglas Coleman,  commenting that in the event the Hearing Officer "finds the  aforementioned charges are substantiated, the same may impact the  Hearing Officer's determination of the appropriate penalty."
The hearing officer sustained, in whole or  part, a number of the charges and specification remanded to him for  reconsideration but did not modify the penalty has originally imposed.
Dundee, while not challenging the hearing  officer’s findings with respect to the charges and specifications he  considered upon remand, appealed the hearing officer’s determination  that no additional penalty should be imposed.
*The decision indicates that “after  reviewing the … counseling memoranda, the Hearing Officer noted that  there was no proof any of the warned offenses were repeated by Coleman.”  The Hearing Officer concluded, “As such, I find and conclude that these  Counseling Memoranda are a critical preface to the progressive  disciplinary scheme inherent in the just cause protocol under [Education  Law] §3020-a.
The school district contended that the  Hearing Officers decision with respect to the penalty to be imposed was  “excessively lenient, against public policy and was arbitrary and  capricious. In addition, argued Dundee, the decision was irrational  because the Hearing Officer did not impose any additional penalty  against Coleman despite the fact that he had been found guilty of  additional charges and specifications.
The Hearing Officer explained “It would be  inherently unfair and totally contrary to the just cause protocol to  issue further discipline to [Coleman] for actions that were never  repeated and I will not do so.”
Dundee asked the court to remand the matter  to a different hearing officer for a new determination as to the  appropriate penalty to be imposed, contending that, in effect, the  Hearing Officer’s ruling is that should a school district issue a  counseling memorandum, and there is not repetition of the offending  conduct, it cannot seek any additional penalty within the context of  subsequent disciplinary action take against the employee. This  interpretation, Dundee claimed, “violates and gives an irrational  construction to existing law.
Judge Falvey said that Dundee’s argument  was will taken and confirmed that his previous ruling that the  underlying conduct described in the counseling memoranda can be the sole  basis for formal disciplinary action pursuant to §3020-a of the  Education Law.
The court concluded that the Hearing  Officer’s decision with respect to the penalty to be imposed “lacks a  rational basis due to his improper reliance on the premise that Dundee  had to prove Coleman repeated the misconduct that gave rise to the  counseling memoranda before he would consider Dundee’s request for a  penalty” and remanded the matter to a new hearing officer for the  purpose of determining the penalty to be imposed.
It should be noted that case law indicates  that the individual’s personnel record may be considered in determining  an appropriate penalty, which record could include “counseling  memoranda.”
In  Scott v Wetzler, 195 AD2d 905, the Appellate Division, Third Department  rejected Scott’s argument that he was denied due process because the  Section 75 hearing officer allowed evidence concerning his performance  evaluations to be introduced during the disciplinary hearing. The court  said that “such evidence was relevant to the determination of an  appropriate penalty,” noting that Scott was allowed an opportunity to  rebut these records and to submit favorable material contained in his  personnel file.
Similarly,  in Bigelow v Village of Gouverneur, 63 NY2d 470, the Court of Appeals  said that such records could be used to determine the penalty to be  imposed if:
1.  The individual is advised that his or her prior disciplinary record  would be considered in setting the penalty to be imposed, and
2. The employee is given an  opportunity to submit a written response to any adverse material  contained in the record or offer “mitigating circumstances.”
In a sense, Coleman’s theory with respect  to using “counseling memoranda” in a formal disciplinary hearing is in  the nature of double jeopardy. A claim of double jeopardy is sometimes  encountered in efforts to suppress a disciplinary action in situations  were the charges reflect the same acts or omissions that were the  subject of counseling memoranda or performance evaluations.The courts  have rejected this theory.
**In Patterson v Smith, 53 NY2d 98, the Court of Appeals said that  including charges concerning performance that were addressed in a  counseling memorandum was not “double jeopardy. ”The court explained that a “proper counseling memoranda” contains a  warning and an admonition to comply with the expectations of the  employer. It is not a form of punishment in and of itself. Accordingly,  case law indicates that giving the employee a counseling memorandum does  not bar the employer from later filing disciplinary charges based on  the same event or events.
The employer, however, may not use the counseling memorandum or a  performance evaluation to avoid initiating formal disciplinary action  against an individual as the Fusco and Irving decisions by the  Commissioner of Education demonstrate [Fusco v Jefferson County School  District, CEd, 14,396 and Irving v Troy City School District, CEd  14,373].
The point made in Fusco and Irving is that comments critical of employee  performance do not, without more, constitute disciplinary action. On  the other hand, counseling letters may not be used as a subterfuge for  avoiding initiating formal disciplinary action against a tenured  individual. 
What distinguishes lawful “constructive criticism” of an individual’s  performance by a supervisor and supervisory actions addressing an  individual’s performance that are disciplinary in nature?
In Holt v Board of Education, 52 NY2d 625, the Court of Appeals decided  that performance evaluations and letters of criticism placed in the  employee’s personnel file were not “disciplinary penalties” and thus  could be placed there without having to first hold a disciplinary  proceeding. In other words, the act of placing correspondence critical  of the employee’s conduct or performance in his or her personnel file  did not constitute discipline.
The basic rule set out in Holt is that a statutory disciplinary  provision such as Section 75 of the Civil Service Law does not require  that an employee be given a hearing or permitted to grieve every comment  or statement by his or her employer that he or she may consider a  criticism. In contrast, alleged “constructive criticism” may not be used  to frustrate an employee’s right to due process as set out in Section  75 of the Civil Service Law, Section 3020-a of the Education Law or a  contract disciplinary procedure. In other words, an appointing authority  may not frustrate an employee’s right to due process as set out in  Section 75 of the Civil Service Law, Section 3020-a of the Education Law  or a contract disciplinary procedure by claiming its action was merely  “constructive criticism.” 
In the Fusco and Irving cases, the Commissioner of Education found that  “critical comment” exceeded the parameters circumscribing “lawful  instruction” concerning unacceptable performance. 
In Fusco’s case, the Commissioner said that “contents of the memorandum”  did not fall within the parameters of a “permissible evaluation” noting  that the memorandum “contains no constructive criticism or a single  suggestion for improvement.” Rather, said the Commissioner, the  memorandum focused on “castigating [Fusco] for prior alleged  misconduct.”
In Irving’s case, a school principal was  given a letter critical of her performance and the next day reassigned  to another school where she was to serve as an assistant principal. The  Commissioner ruled that these two actions, when considered as a single  event, constituted disciplinary action within the meaning of Section  3020-a of the Education Law. 
* The original  penalty that was imposed provided for a suspension without pay for six  months but directed Dundee to continue Coleman’s participation in the  school district’s health insurance plan. In his earlier ruling, Judge  Falvey struck the requirement that Dundee continue to provide Coleman  with health insurance at the school district’s expense. 
** "Double jeopardy" is essentially a bar to retrying an individual for the same crime in a criminal court. The doctrine, however, does not bar filing administrative disciplinary charges against an individual against whom criminal charges have been filed involving the same event or events. Indeed, an individual who has been found guilty of criminal conduct cannot be found not guilty of the same offense[s] in a subsequent administrative disciplinary action [see Kelly v Levin, 440 NYS2d 424]. Nor is the filing of criminal charges a bar to proceeding with administrative disciplinary action while the criminal action is pending [see Levine v New York City Transit Authority, 70 AD2d 900, affirmed 49 NY2d 747; Chaplin v NYC Department of Eduction, 48 A.D.3d 226; and Haverstraw-Stony Point CSD, 24 Ed. Dept. Rep. 466].